Scottish Daily Mail

The SNP carps from the sidelines about Kwasi’s tax U-turn – but where on earth is Sturgeon’s cogent economic blueprint?

- GRAHAM Grant

THE Tory tax U-turn is the very definition of an open goal for the SNP, so it’s no surprise that it spent much of yesterday capitalisi­ng on it.

Yet while it makes hay with the Kwasi climbdown, the Scottish economy remains in the doldrums after a series of punitive Nationalis­t tax raids.

The cross-Border tax gap means anyone living in the SNP’s progressiv­e paradise pays a hefty premium for the privilege – even if public services are in terminal decline.

After the horrors of the pandemic, that disparity is a lead weight attached to any hope of recovery – and it looks as if it’s here to stay.

Nicola Sturgeon and John Swinney, her stand-in Finance Secretary, claimed the volteface on scrapping the 45p tax band was a glorious vindicatio­n of their own approach.

Retreat

You might wonder what that is, as so far the SNP’s only real response to the Tory growth plan has been, largely, prevaricat­ion – although naturally it railed against tax breaks for the ‘super-rich’.

The Chancellor’s retreat on abolishing the 45p tax has given the SNP the licence it needs to keep doing nothing, arguing that it would be wrong to replicate the Tory tax chaos in Scotland.

That’s a wilful misinterpr­etation of events and bad news for the economy in Scotland, where growth has been running at roughly half the UK level since 2014, languishin­g in SNP-induced torpor.

Someone living in Scotland on a basic salary of £20,000 – hardly one of the ‘super-rich’ – pays £52 more in tax than they would in England, rising to an extra £195 for £30,000, a £395 premium for those on £40,000, and £1,863 for those earning £50,000.

For those on salaries of £60,000, the extra tax bill is £2,020 but, for the SNP, anyone on its 41p tax band, including head teachers and police sergeants, is impossibly well-off – and indeed ‘rich’, as shamed former finance secretary Derek Mackay once called them.

The signal has been clear for years. Working hard isn’t rewarded, while billions more are ploughed into benefits and a public sector which accounts for 22.1 per cent of total employment, up by 2.4 per cent in the past year.

Economic expansion can only be powered by business, but its needs have been consistent­ly overlooked or neglected by the SNP Government, not least during the pandemic.

Its big ideas to help businesses recover now that the worst of Covid is behind us were to introduce a tax on driving to work – and threaten a hike in already sky-high business rates.

Ludicrousl­y, a parliament­ary group last week proposed a universal basic income to reduce health inequaliti­es, a move that would cost up to £20billion – money for nothing, bankrolled by, you guessed it, higher taxes.

Given the pressures of this world, with rising mortgage costs and energy bills, a trip to the parallel universe inhabited by these blue-sky thinkers might be a welcome relief from the strains of the cost of living crisis.

And as much as the SNP is happy to carp from the sidelines about the Tory tax meltdown, it’s painfully clear to anyone who’s been paying attention that it has no cogent plan of its own, or indeed any plan at all, to galvanise the Scottish economy.

True, the Tories’ growth strategy was probably too much, too soon – lots of good ideas when just one or two, at this very early stage of a new government, would have been sufficient. But its principles were sound, though the prioritisa­tion of growth is a heresy for the SNP – which is wedded to failed, Left-wing statism of the tax-and-spend variety, with the emphasis on tax.

It’s also in league with the anti-capitalist Greens; as a result, in the corporate world, some senior players are completely in the dark about the SNP’s rescue plan for the economy it has helped to drive into the ground.

One female entreprene­ur told the Sunday Times: ‘I know all about the First Minister’s views on transgende­r issues and nothing about her plans for the economy.

‘She doesn’t want to cut taxes, fine, so what’s her plan to create well-paid jobs and attract investment?’

A very good question but, as ever, answers are scarce.

The other brilliant SNP idea was to hire a ‘chief entreprene­ur’, Mark Logan, on a taxpayer-funded salary of £192,000 for eight days a month – nice work if you can get it.

Meanwhile, the growth rate in the number of Scots starting new businesses is lagging behind the rest of the UK.

Strategic

Liz Lloyd, the First Minister’s strategic and political adviser, tweeted yesterday in support of a ‘reversal of [UK Government] plans to slash investment in public services’.

Yet the SNP Government’s spending review, published back in May, paved the way for major cuts in the years ahead, with the axe falling on councils, police, the fire service and universiti­es.

Of course, that’s the Tories’ fault – blame-shifting is the first tenet of Sturgeonom­ics – but the growth Liz Truss is aiming to stoke, under plans which the SNP vehemently opposes, would be a financial boost for Scotland.

It’s that sharing mechanism – allowing the pooling and sharing of wealth across the UK – that the SNP wants to end for ever with its independen­ce crusade.

The Tories’ problems, many of which would have been avoided with better planning and communicat­ion (perhaps even within the Cabinet), have overshadow­ed the fact that the push for a second referendum is on life support.

Out-of-touch Miss Sturgeon, pictured the other day with an obliging flunkey holding an umbrella over her head, will be grateful for the deflection.

Botched

The tax row has also overshadow­ed the small matter of the SNP’s botched CalMac ferries contract, and allegation­s of corruption, as costs soar towards £400million.

Millions have been ploughed into public inquiries to probe SNP blunders but it’s a safe bet there will never be an inquest into the party’s abject failure on the economy – at least not one instigated by this Scottish Government.

It is happier obsessing about independen­ce, setting aside £20million for a referendum that will not materialis­e, and boasting about its progressiv­e values.

Just how progressiv­e was revealed yesterday in a report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, which painted a ‘bleak picture of a society in crisis’, with nearly one in five households on low incomes in Scotland ‘hungry and cold this year, even before we enter the winter months’.

Don’t kid yourselves the SNP cares more about those families than its goal to smash the Union, at any cost – or that in the meantime it has any clue how to grow the economy (given its partnershi­p with the Marxist Greens, it’s not even clear it wants to).

What we can expect is more of the same, for as long as this tired bunch of pathologic­ally incompeten­t ideologues are in office.

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